/"ll/k/fl T . the proper classifi- I H?i i less 1 I [money i flhan Any Other Kind Of I Advertising |RY THEM 1935 Tenant Homes Corporation I o By GUY A. CARDWELL, 3 Agricultural and Industrial Agent i Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Co. j * . C Senator J. H. Banhead, of Ala- 1 bama, has introduced a bill S. j 1800?"To Create The Farm Ten- . ant Homes Corporation, to pro- { mote more secure occupancy of [ < farms and farm homes, to correct j J the economic instability resulting from some present forms of farm j tenancy, and for other purposes." | ( To the South, and I think to1 y the Nation, this is one of the j j most important measures before j Congress. If you are interested in !' checking the future spread of ( farm tenancy, and wish to abol- . ish the abuses and poverty which I ( are an aeenmnnniment nf the I system, get a copy of the bill,1' study it and take the usual way , of letting your Congressmen ' know of your interest in the subject and in the bill. In testifying at hearings on the Bankhead Tenancy Bill, Marchj' 5th, 1935, Secretary of Agricul-j turc, Henry A. Wallace, stated in part: "During the past half century, the increase in farm tenancy has been one of the undesirable and j yet wide-spread characteristics of rural America. Only two generations ago we were at the heights of the Homestead movement, j which had as one of its funda- j mental aims the creation of an < agriculture made up predominantly of small farm operators. Today we find that half of our farm lands are operated by tenants, and nearly that large a percentage of our farmers rent all of th? land they farm. Tenancy is closely associated with the specialized production of the major cash crops, the surplus I of which has been troubling this I country for more than a decade.: j Because it is associated with | ! commercial farming and specialiI zed crop production it is closely | associated with and related to j I that other great evil of our land ! system?land speculation. The fact that the tenant farmer has been intrusted with some of the best soils of the Nation is especially serious because a large j proportion of our tenants have i little permanent interest in soil conservation. The average period | of occupancy by tenants is only | a little more than four years. Since few tenant's contracts provide compensation for improvements made by the tenant and since both landlord and tenant are usually interested in the production of cash crops, it follows that in general tenancy is largejly responsible for the serious progressive depletion of soil fertility. We can hardly deal fundamentally with the erosion and other types of soil wastage until we bring about a change in the relationship of tenant farmers to I the land they operate. Some of the worst characteristics of the American tenancy sys- i tern are found in the South. A | great many people think south- j em tenants are mostly negroes.!' On the contrary, of the 1,800,000 tenants and croppers reported in ! the sixteen southern States by j the 1930 census, only 700,000, or j less than 40 per cent were neg- j roes. Notwithstanding the tre-1 mendous increase in tenancy which occurred in the South between 1920 and 1930, all the gain was brought about by an increase in the number of white tenants. In fact, there was a slight decrease in the number of negro tenants and croppers between j 1?20 and 1930, but there was a gain of 69 per cent in the num- ( ber of white croppers during that I decade. A large number of southem owners and share tenants, 1 particularly white owners and tenants, were forced to revert to , the propertyless status of croppers by the agricultural depression which started with the fall of prices in 1920. The disintegration of the farm system in the South, particularly ' the plantation phase, has become progressively more rapid since the 1 World War. Factors which con- 1 tribute to this include the in- J creased mechanization of cotton j production, 'specially in the western areas and in the alluvial 1 portions of the lower Mississippi J1 valley; adverse influence on older ( areas of the competition in cotton production by the newer western areas; soil erosion and dep- ( letion of soil fertility from the ( one crop system; the gradual de- , pletion of timber resources which ( formerly supplied employment j ( and income in many areas; a ( series of price crises since the World War that impaired the j ability of many landowners, supply merchants and plantation operators to supply their tenants and the pull of industrial employ- < ment which attracted labor from the South until the advent of the depression in 1929. Since the depression, the displacement of Southern tenants and the increase 1 in the number of rural "squatter" l has been sharply increased. l In the South, as in many other < regions, the real problem is to, c THE STATE P eassociate labor, land and capi- ( al in such manner as to enable j, he people to maintain a better j tandard of living than formerly i inder more wholesome conditions j f operation both for the people j .nd the land. j We have been talking about j he evils of farm tenancy in this ; iountry for a great many years. j f t is high time that America facd her tenant situation openly, md pursued a vigorous policy of mp rove men... Studies made by i he Department of Agriculture, j j State experiment stations, and | >ther research agencies have re-1 >eatedly shown that in communi- , Jes where tenancy is extensive, ' here is an unusual degree of ru al instability and lack of a well j tnit social life. It is almost impossible for tenant families who I move from place to place every two or three years to participate j in the activities of schools, chur-1 ches and other similar rural in- [ stitutions. An active Government program I aimed at making owners out of desirable tenants, through a sys-1 tern of long term loans which can be repaid by taking the ordinary rent as payment toward the ownership of a farm, is a thoroughly sound and justifiable procedure for creating greater security and more desirable homes for our rural tenant population. During the period when the purchasers are slowly creating an equity in the farm they operate they will have all the security of an owner and should develop a real and lasting interest in maintaining their homes and permanently participating in the social life of their communities. I am happy to support a meas ?- - a 11- ? 1 iu ure wmcn naa aa na aim uic creation of a substantial group of farm owners out of our present tenant class. I know of no better means of re-constructing our agriculture on a thoroughly sound and permanently desirable basis than to make as its foundation j the family-sized, owner-operated farm. I believe that the provisions of this bill can be put into effective operation in such manner as to bring greater individual opportunity and security to thousands of tenants. At the same time, they should be of substantial aid in our crop adjusting programs, and in our attempts to conserve soil fertility and prevent erosion. Moreover, these provisions will aid materially in bringing about the development of a rural civilization embodying a higher standard of living and a j better developed and more stable j community life than has been possible under a system characterized by land speculation, absentee landlord and migratory tenants. Buy Boy A Calf Start Dairy Herd Every farm boy is interested in animal life and desires something of his own to feed and handle. "One of the best ways of fulfilling these natural desires is to | buy the boy a pure bred, registered calf and enroll the boy into the 4-H club where he can learn how to feed and care for his animal to best advantage," says F. j R. Farnham, dairy extension specialist at State College. "We now have 4-H calf clubs in near- \ ly every county of the State and the county farm agent or his as- j sistant will be glad to give the boy advice and suggestions as to proper methods of handling his animal." Mr. Farnham says, in the past, farm boys have selected crops for I their club projects and have j changed from one crop to an- j other each year forgetting in a large measure some of the good ideas learned about handling the j previous crop. This does not en-1 courage the proper attitude of sticking to a thing until it is finished. "If the boy is given a purebred calf, his club activity in connec-1 tion with handling the animal ( will develop into a long-time, supervised farm practice," Farn- j bam says. "The boy builds on the i small project of one calf each j successive year until at the end ' of the high school period, this young man has organized an ac-1 tual business of sufficient size to challenge his best managerial \ ibility." Garnham says many North Carolina boys at the age of ten ! or twelve years have started with ( one calf and are today owners of splendid small dairy herds that ^ ire providing a source of cash ( income to pay the owner's way 1 through college. It need not be , in expensive undertaking to jtart. Many breeders are glad to , oo-operate in supplying a pure , ored animal at a very normal } :ost. j Carmel Men Like Present-Day Type J London, April .?Men who j ived 80,000 years ago are the learest approach to modern hu- \ nan beings yet discovered, ac- i lording to Theodore D. McCown, i >f California University, 26-year- ^ 1 ORT PILOT, SOUTHPORT, jays Production j? Of Cotton Shows i? Decrease Abroad j; e Secretary Wallace Refutes i Claims That AAA Pro-|s gram Spurred Foreign * Yield a DISCUSSES DECLINE |c IN COTTON EXPORTS J Says Much Of Reduction j f Due To Foreign Custom- f ers Using Stocks Al- , ready On Hand; j House Members to Seek Interview 11 With President ' On Textile Problem i Atlanta, April ?Foreign cotton production shews a decrease ' for the 1934-35 season despite \ 4 NORTH CAROLINA stimated at $3,629,000 bales,; hereas the consumption of for-; ti ign growths was 8,101,000 bales. & his represented a decrease of d ,276,000 bales of American cot- j v on from a like period one year [ s< arlier and an increase of 1,521,- j o 00 bales in consumption of for- d ign growths. "Studies made by the repre- v entatives of the Department of s Agriculture and others," he said, fi show that one reason for this! t hift is the unwillingness of this o :ountry to accept goods or ser-11 rices in adequate amount in re- 1; urn for exports of our cotton." g Wallace said economic trends, j let in motion by the World War, 1 lave aggravated America's difficulties in relation to cotton exports. Prior to the war, he said, (America was primarily a debtor , cation?today it is on the other . side as a credit country. Would Be Worse "Proposals that this country I' should do anything and every- j' thing, aside from accepting for-1 eign goods in exchange, to pre-' serve its cotton exports do not, offer the South any advantages comparable to the loss that would j result in dismantling the cotton program," he said. "That such | proposals would mean discarding! the program is almost openly admitted by their sponsors. Only Intelligent Truly BeautifulI Philadelphia, April .?Beauty and brains are synonymous, according to the deans of women at three universities here. Each dean pointed to numerous women students, who not only ranked high in their studies, but possessed the qualifications for competing in beauty contests. None of the deans would admit that there was any basis for the| oftused phrase, "beautiful but dumb." "There never was a girl who was both beautiful and dumb," Miss H. Jean Crawford, director of women at the University of Pennsylvania, declared. "It was just a myth. The two things are incompatible. For true beauty is born of intelligence and character. "The girls who do the :cest work in our colleges invariably are handsome girls. Their intelligence is reflected in their faces, and most of all, in their eyes. Only intelligent people can be truly beautiful. FOR Graduation ANEW ELGIN claims of opponents of ted States curtailment prog?? that it would force other na 1 | to raise more of the s^p f A ri. That's what Secretary of Agn culture Wallace told a meeting , S more than 1.000 farmers when he announced the processing tax would be continued. Wallace said foreign cotton a raglC933d burrs "preceded the rotton program launched in this country the same year. For the 1934-35 season, tne secretary reld. reP?r *. J22 Sr" 53,000 1933-34 In other words, foreign cotton prMucUon rtiows ^ an increase but a slight decrease. "Foreign cotton 1034 35 is larger in Ch.na, Rus sia Brazil and minor producing countries, but these increases are more than offset by decreases in Egypt, India and Me*ica Production in Brazil "Much publicity has been giv i en to me increase in cotton production in Brazil. The paction this season is now *1 1,591,000 bales as compared with 969,000 bales in 1933-34 an . 000 bales in 1932-33. "Expansion which had already gained much headway before our program was launched was com Hnued The increase of 622,000 bate^ since oitr progren -1 launched represents n?rettan? per cent increase of Braflla" production, but it amounts ^ about 6 per cent of ^United s^e 5SK S Brest, attempt to stampede the A1"6" can cotton growers into abandoning the program which has lifted them out of the mire of a fourcmtentlon I that the cotton program ^ caused customers of the United States to turn elsewhere for their cotton arises primarily from the ( decrease in American cotton ex ( ports since last August l. Using Present Stocks He said the reduction in ex-1 ports, when analyzed, leads to the discovery "that much of it is due to the fact that foreign users of cotton, instead of buying American supplies, have been using up the stocks of American cotton already on hand. -Whereas," he continued, for-( eign nations since August 1 of last year through February 1935, have cut their imports of Amen can cotton by 41 per cent, they have reduced their consumption of American cotton by only 26 ^He^said America must facetb? I fact that there have been shifts in consumption abroad ^u American to foreign growths during the first half of the 1934-35 season . Foreign consumption of Amen-, can cotton during this penod was | old American anthropologist. McCown is working with three other research experts?two worn en and a man?at Downe Re search Farm, Kent, on prehistoric remains brought from the . northwestern slopes of Mount Lebanon, Palestine, by a joint ex- ^ pedition undertaken by the B ish School of Archaeology in L Jerusalem, and the Amencanj. _ , , n? acnooi ui rraiiBu/ni; nesetuvu, luring 1932. Among the petrified fragments that were discovered in naturally , cemented rock which evidently 1 was a primitive settlement, were '< found skulls of Carmel men show- J ing fiercely protruding, powerful oony ridges above the eyes, which ' would have given a terrible ape- "! like appearance to the face. The Jkulls also showed strong, square- j ly jutting chins, not uncharacteristic of the ape-type, but nev- " irtheless more like the chins of nodern human beings than the j ower jaw of the Neanderthal ] nan living 25,000 years ago. The teeth of the Carmel men, which are perfectly preserved, j ire small and regular and almost ; dentical with the present-day " luman teeth. j ? - ^ .few "I don't know where the 'beau- i ful-but-dumb' theory originat- j said Miss Edna Clark, acting j ean of women at Temple Uniersity, "but an examination of j cholastic records at almost any j o-edu:ational institution would isprove it." Miss Ruth M. Dorsey, dean of romen at Drexel Institute, also aid that the old maxim was a allacy. She expressed the belief j hat the saying was probably j, riginated by a man, "one en- , irely unfamiliar with the schoastic work of many beautiful , firls." JSE COTTONSEED MEAL AS LIVESTOCK FEED The almost unlimited supply ;f cottonseed meal at a reason-1 able price is considered one of the greatest natural advantages available tn southern livestock It's Smart To Give And Smart To Own The new Elgin Watches in our store are truly beautiful?modern as the moment. ? w t e* fir i n v/M T Lti U3 nc,Lr iuu WITH YOUR GIFT SUGGESTIONS George W. j Huggins Co. JEWELERS 117 N. Front St. WILMINGTON, N. C. ? s I Wi 8 We welcome 8 The best of luck If Through the jf in close touch wit wick County. Wf I "WELCOME | ON COUNT' 1 VISIT THE | RUN BY PI< 1 "WE TEACI| Brunsi N t -?- ? ? producers. Tests conducted at the N. C. j Agricultural Experiment Station have disclosed that one pound of cottonseed meal is the equivalent j of two pounds of grain when used as a protein supplement in j animal feeds. Earl H. Hostetler, in change of animal husbandry research at the station, stated that recent experiments have shown that cottonseed meal can be fed safely to horses and mules, provided that the meal is used as a supplement to adequate pasturage and proper roughage in the diet. A good way to feed the meal /g = THESI Not Sj BUT OUR REC COFFEE, Grain or grc SALMONS, per can .... WHOLE GRAIN RICE, GOOD FLOUR, 12 lbs. GOOD FLOUR, 24 lbs 10 BARS LAUNDRY S 10 Pkgs. WASHING P' LUZIANNE COFFEE, 1 CIGARETTES, 2 pkgs. 48-lbs. FLAKE WHITE 50 lbs. PURE LARD . YOUR TRADE Garrell ] Wolesale i WHITEVII School( i|| Attend the Count Exercises in South; ij Be sure to visit ou ice cream and dr j Watson's Southpoi ELCOM ; the return of The Si to the new managemei columns of The Pilot "n h the citizens of South] itch for our advertisen TO THE CHILDREN, Y COMMENCEMENT DAY LUNCH STAND ON THE 3 AND PAE." I YOUR $ TO HAVE MORI yick Pic an( SOUTHPORT N. C. ' ^ II ill HI SEVEN s to distribute it over the corn, >referably at the night feeding, -lostetler pointed out. He suggested that only a small imount of meal be given when :irst starting horses or mules on :ottonseed meal. Later, when the immals get used to eating it, the -ation may be increased to one )r two pounds of meal daily for ;ach 1,000 pounds of live weight However, he warned, cottonseed meal is not a complete substitute for grain in the diet. It has also been found that when pigs are fed, free choice, a diet of corn and a mixture of equal parts of cottonseed meal, fish meal, and mineral, they gained 12 percent more rapidly and were 24 per cent more profitable than those fed in the same manner without the meal. Cottonseed meal is not only a nutritious feed for all kinds of livestock, Hostetler added, but it also contains important soil-building elements which furnish excellent plant food when returned to the land in the form of manure. Practically all cotton growers of Catawba County are renting the maximum of 35 percent of 1 ~ A tneir Dase acreage uuuci uic oujustment contracts. The Mecklenburg Jersey Breeders Association is planning a j more aggressive campaign for popularizing the breed in that section. A Jersey calf club sale will be held in May. i ARE 111 Decials 1 JULAR PRICES I >und, lb 10c 10c per lb 5c for 45c III *?. . for 85c HI S OAP 25c OWDER 25c L lb. can 25c for 25c i LARD $6.25 U| / $7.75 ||1 APPRECIATED Brothers |j and Retail -LE, N. C. I flj Children i y Commencement port next Tuesday. r soda fountain for inks of all kinds. Pharmacy t, N. C. E! I tate Port Pilot. nt. ft" ve hope to keep S ?ort and Bruns- sclents. g SQUARE jfe E CENTS" 1 Pae ft